This is gold to me, I'm over my 30s starting a new hobby. I'm happy I came across your channel, your friendly demeanor and straight forward approach has been extremely helpful.
I went ice skating for the first time this weekend. I was surprised at how good was. Years of rollerblading and watching hockey movies might have helped. I have a lot to learn, so I will practice these drill on the ice.
My God! I'm a rollerblader, but I watch your videos and they're actually probably more useful than most of the rollerblading videos : So well- thought out, so well explained. This one blew me away. It'll keep me going for weeks. Thanks a million, mate. Keep teaching, you've got a talent for it! Xxx
Just got back into hockey after a 34 year hiatus. At 59 it is hard, but these videos reinforce the need for balance and edges. I'll get there and will continue to work on these areas. Coaches Jeremy and Scott are great for all ages and levels.
Great video. I wonder if it would have been helpful to mention the “toe flick”, when going over the basic stride. For those who are new to skating I’ll explain: At the start of your forward skating stride, the part that digs into the ice the most is the back third of your blade. As your leg extends outwards, that switches to the middle third of your blade. The “toe flick” is the remaining third of your blade. And it digs into the ice when, at the end of your stride, your kick your toe downward, as a final push before bringing your leg back in. It is a fact that one third of the power of your skating stride comes from that “toe flick”. And yet, it tends to be something that we have to teach people to do, as most don’t do it naturally, and hence, learn to take strides that are a third less powerful than they could be. So that “toe flick” tends to be an important thing to teach new skaters.
Great video! I started playing half a year ago and my edge control is so shitty, but I never know what to do once I'm alone on the ice and I'm kind of afraid of falling. These drills look doable for beginners and perfectly practicable for advanced people as well, thank you so much!
Great drills. Not only does it make you feel your edges better, but it helps you become more ambidextrous. After doing these drills, stopping on my weak side became a lot more comfortable.
Could you possibly do a video on training your non dominant leg? I know it's sounds silly and that the cure is just practice on the other leg. But it's not as simple as that. It consistently feels very weak compared to my right(dominant) leg.
really great video and advice! I'm a figure skater trying to convert to hockey skates as I'm learning to play, and this video was extremely helpful because of the differences between the skates and difficulty with this transition!
EXCELLENT...EXCELLENT...EXCELLENT video and drills. I'm on my way to practice now and I'm going to use those edge drills. Thanks very much. Keep 'em coming.
Thanks! I forget alot and your videos help. This will help me profect stopping thanks! Alot of time if I think about it I'll be sloppy but if I just do it without thought then I actually stop. And the same thing with my shot.... if I think about it I'll screw up. But if I just do it I make holes in metal bike baskets and break exits signs and coffee cups from a distance ! I had a better shot before, now I suck with a capital S for stevie.
I have a hard time trusting myself. I can stop on my right side, cross over with my right, and turn backwards turing left but as soon as I try the other diretions I totally chicken out or eat it.
LOL - I had the same problem learning to stop as a child because I taught myself by keeping one hand on the board rail for stability, and going around the rink in the same direction, without thinking I should alternate directions. Eventually I decided to drill my left side, starting only with the turn - using two pylons, and skating figure eights around them. I went really slow at first. Go as slow as you need to go in order to maintain perfect form through the turn. Once you can turn right & left with perfect form, then you can gradually speed it up until you can turn both ways sharp, fast, and with good balance. As far as the left side hockey stop goes, I mentioned practice turning left first, because once you can turn left with ease, stopping left will come with little efforts. Your body is already used to executing a nice tight turn, now, and the stop is sort of a turn that is so tight that your blades dig into the ice. You’ll find you can accomplish a left side Hockey stop well, once you are comfortable executing a tight turn to the left. I know it can be frustrating, but just drill that figure eight for like 15 minutes a day, and I guarantee you will get it before long. Good luck 😎
Hi .. I'm very exciting that I bought my first ⛸ today in my 36 yr age & most exciting for me is that that my son 9 year old both son & dad is going to use it from tomorrow ... we both are nervous too that wht will happen after all we dont ve any coach to train ... we are totally dependent on the TH-cam channels like yours ...thr are some boys who plays ice hockey but they are also beginners ... in short ths game is totally new in my place .. but we are exciting to move forward ..... any tips for us pls forward the link & thanks for such channels
Brand new skater. How to I get up to the outside edge drill? I don't feel comfortable at all on the outside edge. Is there a way to work up to the drills shown in the 3:00 portion of this video?
How are you able to run in place on the ice? My feet force me to lean on an edge at all times. If I try to stay straight, my feet and ankles wobble violently side-to-side and cause the inside of my feet to burn in pain and I have to take frequent breaks from skating.
I wish I had had these videos when I was young (now 46). I always felt more comfortable practicing skating with a stick in my hand even if I was not a good hockey player - is that quite common?
Brian Steele I guess that's because a hockey stick can be likened to a crutch - it will help you stop yourself from falling down. The stick can be useful to complete some skating moves but shouldn't be relied upon as in a game situation people lift sticks all the time so only depend on your legs and your skate edge work and you'll be good 👍😎
***** Yup the ice we have is pretty bad. Combined with the lines being painted pretty much never, it kinda sucks. But hey, hockey on shit ice is better than no hockey at all.
I have three rinks within 45 mins of me. None are especially great. But that's Southern California for you. But I have played at both Staples Center (Kings) and Honda Center (Ducks). NHL ice is amazing. Playing at Honda Center again tomorrow actually.
I'm a casual skater for many years using hockey skates without knee/shin pads. I am having problem with the outside edges, finding my feet would collapse to the inside the boots, almost like the ankle support isn't high enough, do I need better skates, pads to fill in the space, or just bad technique?
I was doing a drill similar to the figure 8 drill today (except just going in one direction never making a full circle) when I was on my left inside edge I was good but when I was on my right inside edge my skate would skid across the ice. I'm assuming I'm just not digging into the edge good enough to keep control. Any tips? Today was only the 2nd time skating since they were sharpened so it shouldn't be that. But idk. Also I'm a new skater, only spent about 12-15 hours on the ice in my whole life. Would love any feedback or advice.
Hi, firstly, thanks for your videos. I'm not taking up ice hockey but just recreational skating, i don't have a stick to support me, how can I turn on one foot, using the outside edge?
Hello Jeremy, I honestly really suck at edgeworks, especially on the: - mohawks turns - T-stop - backwards stop Do you think that a pair of Marsblade would help me to improve? My other question is this one: When I try to mohawk turn, I feel some pain at the knees. Is it because it's not natural for me to do this? Do you think that trying to mohawk off ice, without skates, just by doing the movement, will solve the problem? Is it possible to train for mohawks on Marsblade? Thanks a lot!
Because, after the first stride or two (once you've gotten some momentum), you want to do the normal (and most effective) stride, which is about pushing to the side. That applies to rollerblading, too. Pushing with your leg behind you is good only for pushing off, to get you going. Otherwise, pushing to the side is the method that won't throw you off balance (front vs. back) and gets you to accelerate most effectively.
I don't know if it's the sharpening (I got my skates sharpened not even 3 weeks ago) or just the fact that I don't have good stability in my left leg but whenever I try to go outside edge on my left foot it just. slides away from under me. any advice? EDIT: I got them re-sharpened and the problem got solved.
I am having issues with my edges. I try to do a cross over but when I lift my leg to put it over my inside skate my inside foot kinda drops and I lose balance , I tried the drill for inside edges where you try to hold the inside edge as long as possible and my foot can't stay up and it wobbles and I lose my balance. What am I doing wrong? Hope you can understand the question !
it looks like its been a month since youve asked this question so i dont know if you got an answer but from what youre saying it sounds like either a) youre outside edges are dull and its causing the skate to kick under you or b) you are not leaning into the crossover enough and not putting enough weight on the skate to keep it steady
I get my skates sharpened pretty often, I don't think they are dull. What should be the weight distribution on the feet in a crossover? P.s thank you for the reply !
When i do crossovers.. im not putting my full weight onto my skate probably about 70%? That other 30% is thrown into my speed. BUt thats for me. How far are you leaning because your outside edge might not be cutting deep enough into the ice to hold you steady. and no worries! I saw no one had answered you so i thought I'd try to give you a hand!
ok late to the party but-- Any chance of videos that really get into and breakdown those outside edges? I'm tired of them being such a bear... It seems to me I need to trust that it's not going to feel quite as good on the ankles (my foot's gonna sit differently in the boot, and is going to feel a bit crammed in, yeah?), which is fine, but I'm just so tired of *knowing* that I'm turning to the outside but my blade's 'flatter' than over on an edge and my body weight is steering me, I'm not letting the edge work. Seems proper edges bet a little crunchy, right? What should my head, my hips, shoulders... should I lean, turn, tilt, ...? Annoyed ;-) Thanks for all of these...
vfxartds I'm sure I've seen videos where they say lean at the hip...so stand up straight attempt your manoeuvre on the outside edge by leaning in with your hips towards the centre of the imaginary circle you would be drawing on the ice. You will still need to bend in the knee, but you adjust it for the balance you need and the tightness required of any turn you attempt to make. Also regarding edges, as long as you've had them sharpened you should be good. If not get them sharpened and try and find somewhere that can put a profile on your skating blades that suits you. Depth of sharpen will also affect how much edge goes into the ice. I've recently trialled a shallow grind 5/8" instead of 1/2" and I like it but it has other issues for the way I skate. One video I saw said the guide is the heavier you are the shallower the grind you should get, the lighter you are the deeper the grind you should get. I'm around 94KG if that helps you decide whether 5/8" grind might be better for your weight or not. The idea is that the heavier you are, having more edge dug into the ice works against you with friction and tires you out sooner. For me the flip side of having the shallow grind is I don't have enough depth to my edge for explosive acceleration which I rely on as a defensive player needing to sprint back during opposition breakaways.
i love those fundamental videos, but i'm not quite able to do as you teach it. when i'm skating on my outside edge my skate's always sliding over the ice resulting in me falling on to it ;D what can i do about it? thanks and sorry for my bad english :)
You might need to get your skates sharpened. If that is not the problem then you just need to focus on technique, it is hard for me to correct your form without seeing how you skate. Start small, and then push yourself more and more to continue to improve. Focus on good balance and proper form and you will get it with practice
Hey coach, stevie ray here, any way I can get discounts off equipment with your help, but I must tell you first your really far away! And it's very hot here, I try just not over heating out there.
I have been skating for about 4 months now I’m almost on the team ! Well I will probably be on the team by next year! Thanks. By the way can I please get 1 like please?
I like your video. It is helpful. For more, i suggest you to see `Skyarza Hockey Coaching Star` . Just type `how to become a better skater hockey` on google search engine. Thanks
dude can you show us more explosive movements right after slow motion theory like other coaches do. it looks like that you are good at theory only.. sorry
Coach Jeremy, if you want to be a mentor/instructor you need to walk the walk after you talk the talk. You demonstrated the power position in both videos #1 and #2, reiterating how important it is to stay is this power position throughout all your skating and training. But then in Video #3 you begin demonstrating how to use your edges and immediately you have already started skating with your knees barely bent and not capable of using any power at all. If you expect the kids to learn the proper way of doing things during all skating drills shouldn’t you the instructor be doing it ? If it’s too difficult or your legs are tired after making several videos in one day, have a fresh skater demonstrate your drills using the proper position at all times. I’m not being a coach from the stands, my young sons picked up on the bad skating positioning the first time they watched your video.
Not certain about the points made but ,if anyone else needs to find out about hockey off ice training drills try Skyarza Hockey Coaching Star (just google it ) ? Ive heard some incredible things about it and my work buddy got excellent results with it.
This is gold to me, I'm over my 30s starting a new hobby. I'm happy I came across your channel, your friendly demeanor and straight forward approach has been extremely helpful.
Enjoy my friend, it's a great game
Lol learning how to skate when you are over 30? That’s worse than being a 40 year old virgin hahahaha embarrassing!!!!
This looks so easy!
Gets to the rink...Uhhh what were the moves again?
Trys random shit
Aw i SUCK! lol
J well that happens
Story of my life. Lol!
practice a bit more bud
James Hossa so true
Yep me watching edge works on youtube and failing miserably IRL.
Thanks for the tips, I don’t play hockey, but I like skating on frozen ponds, “Jesus hiking” as I call it...I’ll try these tips
I went ice skating for the first time this weekend. I was surprised at how good was. Years of rollerblading and watching hockey movies might have helped. I have a lot to learn, so I will practice these drill on the ice.
My God! I'm a rollerblader, but I watch your videos and they're actually probably more useful than most of the rollerblading videos : So well- thought out, so well explained. This one blew me away. It'll keep me going for weeks. Thanks a million, mate. Keep teaching, you've got a talent for it! Xxx
Just got back into hockey after a 34 year hiatus. At 59 it is hard, but these videos reinforce the need for balance and edges. I'll get there and will continue to work on these areas. Coaches Jeremy and Scott are great for all ages and levels.
Great video. I wonder if it would have been helpful to mention the “toe flick”, when going over the basic stride. For those who are new to skating I’ll explain: At the start of your forward skating stride, the part that digs into the ice the most is the back third of your blade. As your leg extends outwards, that switches to the middle third of your blade. The “toe flick” is the remaining third of your blade. And it digs into the ice when, at the end of your stride, your kick your toe downward, as a final push before bringing your leg back in. It is a fact that one third of the power of your skating stride comes from that “toe flick”. And yet, it tends to be something that we have to teach people to do, as most don’t do it naturally, and hence, learn to take strides that are a third less powerful than they could be. So that “toe flick” tends to be an important thing to teach new skaters.
Great video! I started playing half a year ago and my edge control is so shitty, but I never know what to do once I'm alone on the ice and I'm kind of afraid of falling. These drills look doable for beginners and perfectly practicable for advanced people as well, thank you so much!
These videos are awesome. Getting back into skating as an adult after decades being off the ice. Making so many gains practising these drills
Great drills. Not only does it make you feel your edges better, but it helps you become more ambidextrous. After doing these drills, stopping on my weak side became a lot more comfortable.
Could you possibly do a video on training your non dominant leg? I know it's sounds silly and that the cure is just practice on the other leg. But it's not as simple as that. It consistently feels very weak compared to my right(dominant) leg.
really great video and advice! I'm a figure skater trying to convert to hockey skates as I'm learning to play, and this video was extremely helpful because of the differences between the skates and difficulty with this transition!
These video are so helpful. I wish I had access to these when I was younger.
Great videos. Good drills. Can't wait to practise them.
That first tip about my blades working against me was 100% true in my case. Im going to work oon keeping my glide leg straight.
Very nice and helpful Video. Thanks much for posting your nice work Coach Jeremy
EXCELLENT...EXCELLENT...EXCELLENT video and drills. I'm on my way to practice now and I'm going to use those edge drills.
Thanks very much. Keep 'em coming.
Thx for sharing !! I took note.
Thank you so much for these videos.
Extremely helpful. Thanks man 👍🏼😎
Great video, thanks for posting.
Thanks! I forget alot and your videos help. This will help me profect stopping thanks! Alot of time if I think about it I'll be sloppy but if I just do it without thought then I actually stop.
And the same thing with my shot.... if I think about it I'll screw up. But if I just do it I make holes in metal bike baskets and break exits signs and coffee cups from a distance !
I had a better shot before, now I suck with a capital S for stevie.
Well I guess it also has to do with how I'm feeling and how my life status is.
great series, thanks. Will there be more videos?
+Bill Giblin Thanks Bill, we have 11 total in the series. Check out our playlists to see them all
Giblin!!!
Bill Giblin Giblin!!!
Bill!!!!!
Bill Giblin!!!!!!!!!!
Great lesson!!! THANK YOU!!!
I have a hard time trusting myself. I can stop on my right side, cross over with my right, and turn backwards turing left but as soon as I try the other diretions I totally chicken out or eat it.
Tim Liebrock I'm a beginner. I started skating this February and now I play representative hockey. It just a takes practice and self confidence.
@@foxxy9491 how long do u practice? how do you practice?
Tim Liebrock same!
LOL - I had the same problem learning to stop as a child because I taught myself by keeping one hand on the board rail for stability, and going around the rink in the same direction, without thinking I should alternate directions.
Eventually I decided to drill my left side, starting only with the turn - using two pylons, and skating figure eights around them. I went really slow at first. Go as slow as you need to go in order to maintain perfect form through the turn. Once you can turn right & left with perfect form, then you can gradually speed it up until you can turn both ways sharp, fast, and with good balance.
As far as the left side hockey stop goes, I mentioned practice turning left first, because once you can turn left with ease, stopping left will come with little efforts. Your body is already used to executing a nice tight turn, now, and the stop is sort of a turn that is so tight that your blades dig into the ice. You’ll find you can accomplish a left side Hockey stop well, once you are comfortable executing a tight turn to the left.
I know it can be frustrating, but just drill that figure eight for like 15 minutes a day, and I guarantee you will get it before long.
Good luck 😎
Hi .. I'm very exciting that I bought my first ⛸ today in my 36 yr age & most exciting for me is that that my son 9 year old both son & dad is going to use it from tomorrow ... we both are nervous too that wht will happen after all we dont ve any coach to train ... we are totally dependent on the TH-cam channels like yours ...thr are some boys who plays ice hockey but they are also beginners ... in short ths game is totally new in my place .. but we are exciting to move forward ..... any tips for us pls forward the link & thanks for such channels
Brand new skater. How to I get up to the outside edge drill? I don't feel comfortable at all on the outside edge. Is there a way to work up to the drills shown in the 3:00 portion of this video?
wear your hockey pads and helmet
Can all those tricks and tips work on inline skates as well or is only for hockey ?
ice skates or ice hockey
Really informative
How are you able to run in place on the ice? My feet force me to lean on an edge at all times. If I try to stay straight, my feet and ankles wobble violently side-to-side and cause the inside of my feet to burn in pain and I have to take frequent breaks from skating.
I wish I had had these videos when I was young (now 46). I always felt more comfortable practicing skating with a stick in my hand even if I was not a good hockey player - is that quite common?
Brian Steele I guess that's because a hockey stick can be likened to a crutch - it will help you stop yourself from falling down.
The stick can be useful to complete some skating moves but shouldn't be relied upon as in a game situation people lift sticks all the time so only depend on your legs and your skate edge work and you'll be good 👍😎
Update im skating now, managed to skate 6 times, on public skate sessions, lots of room to improve but its been good so far
Good stuff they really helped me out 👍
Is the order of this series good for learning as an absolute beginner
Daniel Castro no , not for beginners. Take some lessons to gain confidence and balance first.
That's some of the nicest ice I've ever seen. You can actually see the lines! haha
***** Okay there, cool guy.
***** It's ok he doesn't understand the tactics of the Zamboni
***** Yup the ice we have is pretty bad. Combined with the lines being painted pretty much never, it kinda sucks. But hey, hockey on shit ice is better than no hockey at all.
I have three rinks within 45 mins of me. None are especially great. But that's Southern California for you. But I have played at both Staples Center (Kings) and Honda Center (Ducks). NHL ice is amazing. Playing at Honda Center again tomorrow actually.
If you're curious, here's where we play. Please excuse the skill level, we're a D6 beer league team ;) vimeo.com/29982374
I'm a casual skater for many years using hockey skates without knee/shin pads. I am having problem with the outside edges, finding my feet would collapse to the inside the boots, almost like the ankle support isn't high enough, do I need better skates, pads to fill in the space, or just bad technique?
I am having trouble.doing the outside edge drill. Do you have any tips, Jeremy?
what's the exercise where you push off and hold edges on each skate for lenghth of time?
I was doing a drill similar to the figure 8 drill today (except just going in one direction never making a full circle) when I was on my left inside edge I was good but when I was on my right inside edge my skate would skid across the ice. I'm assuming I'm just not digging into the edge good enough to keep control. Any tips? Today was only the 2nd time skating since they were sharpened so it shouldn't be that. But idk. Also I'm a new skater, only spent about 12-15 hours on the ice in my whole life. Would love any feedback or advice.
Awesome video!! great job!!! :)
Hi, firstly, thanks for your videos. I'm not taking up ice hockey but just recreational skating, i don't have a stick to support me, how can I turn on one foot, using the outside edge?
Watch close, he never actually leans on the stick. The stick is a bit of a guide for the hands.
awesome!
Hello Jeremy,
I honestly really suck at edgeworks, especially on the:
- mohawks turns
- T-stop
- backwards stop
Do you think that a pair of Marsblade would help me to improve?
My other question is this one: When I try to mohawk turn, I feel some pain at the knees. Is it because it's not natural for me to do this? Do you think that trying to mohawk off ice, without skates, just by doing the movement, will solve the problem?
Is it possible to train for mohawks on Marsblade? Thanks a lot!
Good stuff
After how many hours of skating should I sharpen the blades? (for a normal recreational skater) Your early reply is very much appreciated. Thanks. =)
I don't understand why with more speed you push more to the side (2:00). Why is that?
Because, after the first stride or two (once you've gotten some momentum), you want to do the normal (and most effective) stride, which is about pushing to the side. That applies to rollerblading, too. Pushing with your leg behind you is good only for pushing off, to get you going. Otherwise, pushing to the side is the method that won't throw you off balance (front vs. back) and gets you to accelerate most effectively.
Thanks a lot it really helped me but I forget when I get to the ice lol xD well I also crossover pretty well thanks!!!!!!!
Outside edges drills are so painful for me...
I don't know if it's the sharpening (I got my skates sharpened not even 3 weeks ago) or just the fact that I don't have good stability in my left leg but whenever I try to go outside edge on my left foot it just. slides away from under me. any advice?
EDIT: I got them re-sharpened and the problem got solved.
defenchockey
How do I trust in the outside edge😊
Nice Graf stick. Can't hardly find those anymore.
Having a hell of a time finding public ice sessions
I am having issues with my edges. I try to do a cross over but when I lift my leg to put it over my inside skate my inside foot kinda drops and I lose balance , I tried the drill for inside edges where you try to hold the inside edge as long as possible and my foot can't stay up and it wobbles and I lose my balance. What am I doing wrong?
Hope you can understand the question !
it looks like its been a month since youve asked this question so i dont know if you got an answer but from what youre saying it sounds like either a) youre outside edges are dull and its causing the skate to kick under you or b) you are not leaning into the crossover enough and not putting enough weight on the skate to keep it steady
I get my skates sharpened pretty often, I don't think they are dull. What should be the weight distribution on the feet in a crossover?
P.s thank you for the reply !
When i do crossovers.. im not putting my full weight onto my skate probably about 70%? That other 30% is thrown into my speed. BUt thats for me. How far are you leaning because your outside edge might not be cutting deep enough into the ice to hold you steady. and no worries! I saw no one had answered you so i thought I'd try to give you a hand!
thanks baudd
Love to be able to be coached by you
Thanks ....!
How do you sharpen your skates
You are not supposed to
The pro shop sharpens skates
ok late to the party but--
Any chance of videos that really get into and breakdown those outside edges? I'm tired of them being such a bear...
It seems to me I need to trust that it's not going to feel quite as good on the ankles (my foot's gonna sit differently in the boot, and is going to feel a bit crammed in, yeah?), which is fine, but I'm just so tired of *knowing* that I'm turning to the outside but my blade's 'flatter' than over on an edge and my body weight is steering me, I'm not letting the edge work. Seems proper edges bet a little crunchy, right? What should my head, my hips, shoulders... should I lean, turn, tilt, ...? Annoyed ;-) Thanks for all of these...
vfxartds I'm sure I've seen videos where they say lean at the hip...so stand up straight attempt your manoeuvre on the outside edge by leaning in with your hips towards the centre of the imaginary circle you would be drawing on the ice. You will still need to bend in the knee, but you adjust it for the balance you need and the tightness required of any turn you attempt to make.
Also regarding edges, as long as you've had them sharpened you should be good. If not get them sharpened and try and find somewhere that can put a profile on your skating blades that suits you. Depth of sharpen will also affect how much edge goes into the ice. I've recently trialled a shallow grind 5/8" instead of 1/2" and I like it but it has other issues for the way I skate. One video I saw said the guide is the heavier you are the shallower the grind you should get, the lighter you are the deeper the grind you should get. I'm around 94KG if that helps you decide whether 5/8" grind might be better for your weight or not. The idea is that the heavier you are, having more edge dug into the ice works against you with friction and tires you out sooner. For me the flip side of having the shallow grind is I don't have enough depth to my edge for explosive acceleration which I rely on as a defensive player needing to sprint back during opposition breakaways.
Why does the scissor skate help you?
been 3 time I watch this videos and I forget all the times
R u in chl or ahl or none?
The Beatles 963
Champion or Amateur he meant maybe? and it'd be 16-20* no?...
Edges!
1.00. 1:02
i love those fundamental videos, but i'm not quite able to do as you teach it. when i'm skating on my outside edge my skate's always sliding over the ice resulting in me falling on to it ;D what can i do about it? thanks and sorry for my bad english :)
You might need to get your skates sharpened. If that is not the problem then you just need to focus on technique, it is hard for me to correct your form without seeing how you skate. Start small, and then push yourself more and more to continue to improve.
Focus on good balance and proper form and you will get it with practice
How To Hockey thank you for taking the time to answer, that is why i love your page. BIG thumbs up from me!
thanks for edging me bro
Literally didnt know what an outside edge was until halfway through my high school career....
I wonder if any NHL players watch these "amateur" videos just for fun sometimes :p
Hey coach, stevie ray here, any way I can get discounts off equipment with your help, but I must tell you first your really far away! And it's very hot here, I try just not over heating out there.
Вот не показывает и не объясняет как поворот делать внешним ребром конька
Олег олегович is this Russian?
This is easy! Try’s it…. Fails it aww I was wrong I suck lol !
I have been skating for about 4 months now I’m almost on the team ! Well I will probably be on the team by next year! Thanks. By the way can I please get 1 like please?
Reply if you like
Aka hit the like button
I like your video. It is helpful. For more, i suggest you to see `Skyarza Hockey Coaching Star` . Just type `how to become a better skater hockey` on google search engine. Thanks
dude can you show us more explosive movements right after slow motion theory like other coaches do. it looks like that you are good at theory only.. sorry
5:27
A
LOL. you're just showing off at the end. Nobody watching this video is going to be doing that. :)
Nomoreidsleft you’re logo thing is cute
Now that I think about it, hockey's a pretty weird sport.
stopping using edges
Coach Jeremy, if you want to be a mentor/instructor you need to walk the walk after you talk the talk. You demonstrated the power position in both videos #1 and #2, reiterating how important it is to stay is this power position throughout all your skating and training. But then in Video #3 you begin demonstrating how to use your edges and immediately you have already started skating with your knees barely bent and not capable of using any power at all. If you expect the kids to learn the proper way of doing things during all skating drills shouldn’t you the instructor be doing it ? If it’s too difficult or your legs are tired after making several videos in one day, have a fresh skater demonstrate your drills using the proper position at all times. I’m not being a coach from the stands, my young sons picked up on the bad skating positioning the first time they watched your video.
I played hockey for 5 years and this is all boring record a harder video for me
Not certain about the points made but ,if anyone else needs to find out about hockey off ice training drills try Skyarza Hockey Coaching Star (just google it ) ? Ive heard some incredible things about it and my work buddy got excellent results with it.
Xbox.com hockey
You failed the third stop. You did a 1 1/2 seacut
Not 1 1/2. I meant 1/2 seacut
.
skate better
I am having trouble.doing the outside edge drill. Do you have any tips, Jeremy?